Friday, March 31, 2006

Reaction to Immigration Debate

Last night the Hollywood strapped U.S. Senator John McCain was on MSNBC talking about immigration. He said something like this, " I don't know how we could gather up 11 million illegal aliens."

You nitwit it's called a War! John McCain was captured by the North Vietnamese and spent a long time as a POW. Ever since he got out of Vietnam, he is a hippy that can't figure out how to round up 11 million illegals. Because McCain is against detention, and therefore finds it, "unconstitutional", to round up illegals.

There was also another Senator yesterday that said, "We need to build a virtual fence", and he went on to say that it would be impossible to build a fence spanning our borders.

I mean this is a flabbergasted old man that thinks the use of the word virtual is hip or something. What a crock of shit. Is this "virtual" the way to save money, and it could break down during electricity outages. They act like the U.S. cannot afford to build a permanent wall spanning the entire distance of our two borders. In my lifetime if the U.S. Government hired me, I will single handedly build a real brick wall spanning the border. We should have built a solid wall back during World War II separating the U.S. from Mexico and Canada. Yet all the freeloaders are still too happy paying cheap wages to illegals.

The worst is having people like Senator Arlen Specter trying to run the whole Immigration policy. His parents aren't even natural born citizens. Gee lets just sit back and let the "Barrack Obama-Osama Bin Laden" and Arlen "Big Nosed Jew" Specter run the entire immigration show. Better yet, how about this solution for Senators not wanting to rounding up illegal aliens: Somebody ready a few English tight ropes for this ill witted Senators?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You seem to be mistaken for what the word virtual means. Allow me to clarify:

vir·tu·al adj.
1. Existing or resulting in essence or effect though not in actual fact, form, or name: the virtual extinction of the buffalo.
2. Existing in the mind, especially as a product of the imagination. Used in literary criticism of a text.

It doesn't mean an electric fence, as you alluded by stating that a virtual fence could "break down during elctricity outages"

And no, it would be both impossible and impractical to build a fence around the nation's borders, not to mention the lack of aestheticism.

Anonymous said...

I had no reference to an elctrical fence. I was refering to using electronic visual homing devices like infrared vision manned by computers, etc.